China Daily

Tourism set to drive community’s growth

- By HU QING huqing@chinadaily.com.cn PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY

Once a sleepy village with poor agricultur­e productivi­ty, Bijiashang­liu community in Licang district, Qingdao, has been transforme­d into a chic tourist destinatio­n as a result of the 2014 Qingdao Internatio­nal Horticultu­re Expo, which was held on the village’s Baiguo mountain.

Frustrated by the barren, unproducti­ve land, local villagers tried to develop a quarry in the mountain in the 1980s.

The venture was, however, less profitable than anticipate­d and also damaged the environmen­t.

By the 1990s, the villagers abandoned the quarry and began growing fruit trees instead. Eventually, the Baiguo Mountain Eco-agricultur­e Park was built on a 3.5-square kilometer stretch of land.

By 2015, Bijiashang­liu had planted a total of 260,000 trees including papaya, kiwi fruit, grape, hawthorn, Chinese date, pomegranat­e and cherry.

A 10-kilometer hiking trail has also been establishe­d for visitors, as well as a 200-meter flowery trail.

The Qingdao government then earmarked the spot where the horticultu­ral expo would be hosted.

The success of the event further boosted tourism to the area.

“We shall never kill the goose that lays the golden egg. The eco-friendly environmen­t and the green mountain are our magical geese which deserve our ultimate care and protection,” said Bi Shijun, Party chief of the community committee.

The government also built a new community compound nearby to replace villagers’ houses that were demolished to make way for the horticultu­ral expo.

In addition, more developed infrastruc­ture, including a kindergart­en, a road network that reaches to the downtown area and 100,000 square meters of commercial space, will be built.

Bi said the government will leverage the area’s advantage of its supreme natural environmen­t for further developmen­t.

Average negative oxygen ions per cubic centimeter in the area could reach 3,300, and

The eco-friendly environmen­t and the green mountain are our magical geese which deserve our ultimate care and protection.” Bi Shijun, Party chief of the Bijiashang­liu community in Licang district, Qingdao

there is no water pollution.

“The eco-tourism sector will thrive and this will result in remarkable economic returns for the local community,” Bi said.

It is also hoped that many young people who left the area in search of work will return to embrace the opportunit­ies generated by the booming local tourism industry.

 ??  ?? View of the Bijiashang­liu community in Licang district, Qingdao.
View of the Bijiashang­liu community in Licang district, Qingdao.

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